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Trioliet is a genuine family-owned company. Brothers Max, Fred and Kees (trio) Liet founded their company in Purmerend in 1950 and named it Trioliet. Following the acquisition of Mullos, the trading name of the company was changed to Trioliet Mullos. In 2007, the position of Director was assumed by Robert Liet, the son of one of the founders. Trioliet is unique as a complete provider of premium feeding machines for dairy farms. All of our machines are geared toward helping the modern livestock farmer manage a farm efficiently. Designing new solutions and developing existing technologies are our highest priorities. We are confident that we can provide a suitable mechanical or automatic feeding solution for 80% of all beef and dairy farms worldwide. In short, Trioliet offers a highly comprehensive and specialist range of livestock feeding machines, such as silage cutters, diet feeders, self-loading or self-propelled mixer feeders and complete automatic feeding systems.

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NASA has put men on the moon, but it couldn't stick the landing when it came to designing a logo that is as cool as its missions. Its two attempts have been nicknamed the "meatball" and the "worm," proving that failure is an option.

The Russians were NASA's chief rival during the space race, so it's ironic that it took a young Russian named Max Lapteff to design a smart, speculative rebranding of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration logo. The mark pulls off a hat trick, referencing NASA's illustrious past, nodding to its dreams of taking us to new planets, and ditching the dated features of the old logo.

NASA has put men on the moon, but it couldn't stick the landing when it came to designing a logo that is as cool as its missions. Its two attempts have been nicknamed the "meatball" and the "worm," proving that failure is an option.

The Russians were NASA's chief rival during the space race, so it's ironic that it took a young Russian named Max Lapteff to design a smart, speculative rebranding of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration logo. The mark pulls off a hat trick, referencing NASA's illustrious past, nodding to its dreams of taking us to new planets, and ditching the dated features of the old logo.